Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Charles De Gaulle Airport to Metro Defense Grand Arche

We will be arriving at 13:45 on February 13 at the CDG airport. We need to get to the Renaissance Paris hotel La Defense. I see that it%26#39;s by the train station/metro stop Defense Grande Arche. What is the best way to get to this stop? Is there a metro or train to this station from the airport? We%26#39;ll only have carry on luggage, so that won%26#39;t be a problem. Also, any insight to staying at the Renaissance Hotel La Defense? I see that it%26#39;s only a couple of stops on the Metro from Charles De Gaulle Etoile, so staying out there shouldn%26#39;t be a problem for us...Let me know if it would pose a problem.



Thank you in advance for all of your help!



jdmckay




|||



Oops, I see that it is six stops from Etoile...no problem! I hope!



jdmckay




|||



It is just one stop by RER from Charles de Gaulle Etoile.





From the airport, you would just take the RER B to Châtelet-Les Halles and transfer to the RER A that will take you to La Défense. A ticket should cost about 10€.




|||



Sounds easy! Thanks!




|||



Access to the hotel will involve a bit of walking since it is .1 mile from the train/metro station. You will have to walk across the plaza and then between office buildings to cross the road between you and the hotel. Suggest you go to the marriott site and check the overhead maps and directions.





Metro takes about 10 minute longer than if you were in the center but you always get a seat.





Hotel is very nice and popular with Marriott points people. We stayed there several years ago.

Free Wifi in Paris, France

One of the WiFi networks I can apparently try to connect to is called FreeWiFi. When I try to connect to this network, it sends me to:





http://wifi.free.fr





which requests a user name and password.





Anyone familiar with this network? Is it free? How can I get a user name and password?





I assume the username and password is only necessary so they can make sure you aren%26#39;t doing anything illegal with your access.









Is http://wifi.free.fr the same thing as:





www.paris.fr/portail/Economie/Portal.lut…





It looks like, if I could read this french site, that I could get a username and password for a free, Paris wide, wifi network.





Is this true?





If it is a wifi network, but isn%26#39;t free, how much does it cost?





Is it possible to get this information in English?



(There is an English link on the top of the page, but click on that link does not send me to an english translation of this page.)









Does anyone have any recommendations on generally Paris wide wifi networks (either free or paid)?









Does anyone have any recommendations on accurate websites containing listings of businesses in Paris offering free wifi access?









Virtually any comments on accessing the internet via wifi in Paris would be welcome.









Thank you.




|||



Free.fr is not free, it costs 29€/month, but there are many sites where you can find free wifi in Paris. Many cafés offer free wifi; you will just have to ask the waiter for the password. Parks in Paris have free wifi, although I have found these signals to be quite weak.







Try: http://www.cafes-wifi.com/




|||



There are lots of hotspots in Paris. If you really need Internet, why don%26#39;t you get or bring a 3G card.





SFR offers cards for limited usage:



1 hour 7 EUros



1 day 9 Euros



8 hours over 15 days 26 Euros



Their website is all in French: sfr.fr/internet-mobile/…




|||



The free wifi Paris offers is, I believe, mostly available in outdoors/public areas.. maybe some apartments or hotel rooms could happen to be near a free hotspot. We used it in one of the little %26#39;pocket parks%26#39; a couple blocks from our hotel, but it wasn%26#39;t available in the hotel.




|||



I read somewhere that McDonalds in Paris all have free wireless - I hope this is true as I don%26#39;t intend to pay 18E to use the wiFi at my hotel lol.




|||



Can you be more specific about where exactly you%26#39;ll be in Paris? That way maybe some of us can come up with suggested spots based on personal experience...




|||



Yes, McDonalds has free wifi for its customers. Use is simple: just open your browser, you will be directed automatically to a webpage where you need to accept the terms of use, and after doing that you can surf. I think the terms of use contain some restrictions regarding porn sites, etc. (not unlogical).



The free internet access offered by the city is available in about 260 public places: libraries, museums, parks, etc (during opening hours!). You can find their locations via the website mentioned above, under %26quot;Localisation des points Wi-Fi%26quot;. At those locations, you should see the Paris WiFi-logo near the base station. On your computer, you should select the Orange network. When you then startup your browser, I understand that you%26#39;re directed to a page where you need to select the %26quot;pass Paris Wi-Fi 2h%26quot;, for 2 hours of free internet use.




|||



Quite a few cafes will give you a passcode for 30min-hour or so, with purchase of a cup of coffee... Cafe du Metro/rue de Rennes was one.





The Columbus Cafe chain of coffee shops have Wifi (free).





columbuscafe.com/columbus-cafe-paris-et-ile-…





http://www.cafes-wifi.com/




|||



Most Paris hotels have free WiFi, some charge it - which of course is utterly stupid, I wouldn%26#39;t book a hotel so business unconscious that it wouldn%26#39;t offer it. Unfortunately that still includes some very nice venues.





Every McDonald%26#39;s has free WiFi, and there are around 400 free hotspots managed by the city, in every park and public buildings. Here%26#39;s a map, sorry I couldn%26#39;t find it in English :





www.paris.fr/portail/Economie/Portal.lut…





These don%26#39;t require any password, but work only between 7AM and 11PM, sometimes less - if a park closes at 8PM, the WiFi shuts domn too.





As you can see on the map, it%26#39;s not just the %26quot;major parks%26quot; that are equipped - basically any place with a few trees has its spot.





Wherever you are in Paris you will find supposedly open-access WiFi, usually by free.fr or Neuf Telecom, but they are in fact for their patrons only. These operators have a %26quot;network%26quot; where all users can borrow some of the bandwidth of their fellow subscribers anywhere.

Wifi at Disneyland hotel

Hello!





3rd trip to the Disneyland Hotel in as many years soming up in September. It is the Netbooks 1st trip to disney!! I was just wondering if anyone has used the wifi in the Disneyland Hotel. If so how do you connect? How much does it cost, was it good? Any infor would be appereciated.

No Vacancies - Help!

I posted an earlier message saying I needed a hotel for 2 nights in September. I am traveling with my 83 year old Mom and would like to be within walking distance of the Seine and perhaps a couple sights. People kindly responded suggesting the Minerve, Hotel de Quai Voltaire, Hotel le Notre Dame - and it turns out they are all full!





Please, any other suggestions? Budget is around 150 Euro per night. Thank you.




|||



I%26#39;ve not booked with either of these sites, but you can try www.parishotels.com and www.laterooms.com the latter one for last minute reservations.




|||



At this late stage it may be best to go to a hotel booking service like hotels.com, where you can put in your dates and budget and have them come up with a list of possibilities.





You can then look at the tripadvisor reviews to get more feedback.





Availability really needs to be your first priority now because I suspect many hotels will already be fully booked for September. The best of luck for your search!




|||



I%26#39;ve used laterooms.com for London and it worked great!




|||



Btw, what are your dates?





For example, the Hotel Cardinal Rive Gauche via the Paris Hotels site has availability but for middle of September (14th through 20th).





And you can always contact the hotel(s) directly if you find availabilities.

supermarket near to Blvd., Francois Grosso?

Hi folks,





Where is the nearest supermarket to buy toiletries in ?



Or can one buy toiletries in supermarket in Nice?





Also if one needed basic bed linen: duvet cover etc., where would I direct 20 yr., old son to go?





Thank you again.








|||



Probably the nearest is a Casino near the railway bridge on Bd gambetta - as it going towards sea



there are plenty of mini markets up gambetta away from sea -plus market fruit and fish market at liberation, and large Intermarche, Shoppi



or a large intermarche and casino at bottom of gambetta by the sea





yes, you can buy toiletries in supermarkets -there are also schlecker shops aroudn which sell all that sort of stuff too [there is one at rue trachel ]





reasonable priced bedding etc - maxi bazaar across from main train station, or the linen shop by railway bridge at top of Jeasn medecin [can%26#39;t recall the name offhand but it does reasaonable bedding cheaply]



or



carrefour at Nice TNL- take tram to Acropolis




|||



Thank you so much for your help, so appreciated.




|||



Intermarché close to Rue de France (one door gives on Gambetta the other one has access on St-Philippe)





On Gambetta there is a Casino 3 blocks from Rue de France (at the corner of Maréchal Joffre)





And there is a Spar on Rue De Grance, slightly off François Grosso

Detailed Turgot Map

I was looking for maps of Paris and stumbled across this very detailed scans of the Turgot maps ... worth a look to see your favorite areas:





…kyoto-u.ac.jp/exhibit-e/f28/f28cont.html




|||



Thank you, an interesting find.

which is best (location and rate)

planning to be in paris, october 2009. please advise which of these hotels is the best in terms of location and rates:Hotel du College de France, Hotel Marignan



Hotel des Grandes Ecoles, Hotel Europe Saint Severin



Hotel Dacia Luxembourg. Thank you.






|||



A street address and district number would be helpful. Happy Travels!




|||



October is a very busy month. Have you verified availability at all those hotels for your dates?




|||



dkjbrooks is absolutely correct about availability, it may be the limiting factor for October. If this is your first time in Paris, I might recommend hotels in either the 5th or 6th arrondissements where I believe at least a couple of the hotels on your list are located.




|||



Hotel des Grandes Ecoles is one place I know pretty well. We%26#39;ve seen 3 of their rooms and have several happy friends/relatives who have stayed there and love this hotel. It%26#39;s in excellent location in the 5th and it%26#39;s clean and well managed by friendly people. The only down side(s) might be that there is no TV in their rooms and they don%26#39;t take reservations more than 2 months in advance.




|||



go to the web sites and check prices





as others have noted, availability will be an issue for October -- you may be lucky to find rooms at any of them and that may narrow your choice





for a first trip I%26#39;d definitely go with something in the Latin Quarter as that is a great location for a first timer -- a lively district and near many of the sights you will want to see




|||



I understand that there is an outdorr patio area with tables. Is it ok to bring back drinks or snacks and sit out there. If you don%26#39;t buy the breakfast from the hotel would it be ok to sit and eat something else there?





Thanks.




|||



It%26#39;s hard to tell which is best in terms of location, it all depends of where you would like to be. Of the five hotels you mention, four are on the left bank, in the latin quarter with lower rates than the hotel the Marignan, which is located on the right side of the river, half block from Champs Elysees, probably the most touristic street in Paris.



If you%26#39;re staying for a few days and want to be on the fancy side, Marignan is your thing, with Avenue Montaigne next door and the big haute couture names like Dior, Max Mara, Nina Ricci, you name it. And the big crowds...Anyhow, anywhere you%26#39;re in Paris there%26#39;s a subway station not too far and the answer on where to stay depends on your budget.




|||



I know the hotels you mentionned and they are all reliable, professionnal and fine (bet you started your selection on this very site!)





I would have an unrationnal, arbitrary preference for the Europe Saint Severin. Friendly people.





Hôtels Paris Rive Gauche is a small chain of hotels, none of which made your list - but they often have interesting offers, and are located in the district you%26#39;re interested in.




|||



....and availavility.....




|||



we once stayed at the Hotel des Grande Ecoles for a week and had wine and cheese purchased from nearby shops in their garden every afternoon with friends before going out to dinner -- it is one of the pleasure of this hotel

30th Birthday - Ideas????

Hi, I am trying to look at planning my 30th birthday which is at the beginning of December 2010 and would love some ideas from anyone who knows this area well.





The reason why I%26#39;m trying to plan ahead is that I now live in NZ (originally from the UK) and due to exchange rates etc I am having to save like crazy to come back to the UK for my birthday next year %26amp; to catch up with family and friends!!





Looking at getting back to the UK mid December and then having a belated birthday in mid-December 2010 or early January 2011.





I am Champagne Crazy and I just thought that a few days in the Champagne-Ardenne region would be spot-on for my 30th! I%26#39;ve never been there; in fact having only ever been to France on a day trip I%26#39;m very excited about the idea.





I know the weather wont be great at this time of year (thanks Mum %26amp; Dad!) but I wonder if it would still be possible ie due to being outside tourist season etc.....





Would really love to have friends and family there; staying in one spot if possible and having a wee minibus to take us around the area........well that would be my ideal!! Sooo depends on money aye??!!!





If anyone has any ideas or could help me in any way; I would be SO appreciative.





In anticipation of a positive reply,





Lou x

Campervans

I am a considering a two week vacation starting and finishing in Paris, that would also include a visit to Spain. Mid/late-September through early October





I am thinking that camper van/mobile home might an option.





What advice would you offer in terms of 1) campervan companies; 2) overnight parking?




|||



This company rents camper vans:





http://www.ideamerge.com/





As to where specifically you might want to spend the night, I recommend an on-line search for camping site guides which could a wide range of options.

Public transport from CDG to Courtyard by Marriott Coulmbes

We are couple who need to get to the Courtyard by Marriott at Coulmbes near La Defense from CDG on Thursday. We land at 5.30PM.



Which is the best public transport that I can avail?



No heavy luggage with us so we can take bus/metro.



Thank you




|||



marriott.com/hotels/…





%26quot;... If you are taking public transportation from Paris France CDG airport to the Colombes Paris Hotel, France, take the rapid rail trail %26quot;RER B%26quot; downtown station called %26quot;Chatelet - Les Halles%26quot;, then change to take rapid rail train line %26quot;RER A%26quot; to %26quot;La Defense%26quot; station in the West of Paris, France. From here there are buses (lines 161, 262 or 272) that all stop right across the street from the Courtyard by Marriott Paris Defense West - Colombes at the %26quot;Buffon%26quot; bus stop ...%26quot;





... or spring for a taxi at least for the inbound trip...

Luxembourg Gardens - Any events happening there in August ?

We are in Paris at the moment (till 28 August) and want to go to the gardens one day for a picnic. We seem to recall reading that there are often free concerts in the park. If anything is happening there during the time, we would like to hear from you. If not, we will go there today.




|||



I don%26#39;t know about this.. maybe b/c we don%26#39;t travel in the summer. I have mostly heard of open concerts in Parc de la Villette and Parc Floral, closer to the outskirts of Paris...





Picnic-ing is going to be %26#39;bench style%26#39; for 95% of J. Luxembourg, as grass lounging isn%26#39;t allowed. If you head for the southward %26#39;spit%26#39; of the garden, actually a separately named garden (Jardin de l%26#39;Observatoire), you can probably have a spread there. Be discreet with any open alcohol as it isn%26#39;t legal but is generally tolerated.

iphone apps in Paris without internet

I have been reading on availability of free wifi in Paris in certain places.



I have iphone but wont have 3G with it, so when I come to Paris, are there any apps relevant to Paris tour that I can run on iphone without internet?




|||



Read up on the Metro apps. I don%26#39;t recall the exact name of it, but I downloaded one to my iPod touch that looks like it let%26#39;s me plan out specific journeys even when I%26#39;m not using wifi.




|||



The MetrO app is what you%26#39;re looking for:





http://nanika.net/Metro/





It%26#39;s available for a variety of smartphones. I%26#39;ve downloaded it for my BlackBerry and plan on making good use of it in both Paris and London.





You also won%26#39;t need an internet connection to use it on your phone - it downloads all the data to your phone.




|||



Thank you all.

Overnight layover in Paris

My husband and I will have an overnight layover in Paris. We arrive at CDG at 530 pm on a Tuesday and leave the next morning at 1030 am. We were wondering if it%26#39;d be worth to make the trip into town and try to get in some sights to take advantage of our layover (Eiffel Tower, etc.) I%26#39;d like to do some kind of boat tour to make sure we can see as many sights as possible.





Can anyone provide some insight if this is doable? If so, what are our best options to get into town? What would be the best part of town to spend the night? Any help is appreciated!





Thanks!



jpavants

RER St Michel

Does anyone know if this station has a working escalator or elevator for those with rolling suitcases? Can%26#39;t manage stairs. Thanks for your help!




|||



It depends on whether you are arriving or departing.





We transferred at that station from RER C to RER B and a double staircase was involved. There were three changes of level to get to the tracks. The other two had escalators.




|||



I will be coming and going from my hotel nearby to CDG. It sounds like escalators. Yeh!




|||



At the north end of the platform (I mean the very end of the platform, %26quot;Sortie 5%26quot;), you have escalators all the way to street level. You%26#39;ll come out in front of Notre Dame Cathedral. All other exits (sorties) involve stairs.




|||



OOPS, I was referring to RER-B from the airports.




|||



Metromole, that sounds good to me since I will take RER B but I hope exit 5 won%26#39;t take me to Ile de la Cite! Thanks for your help.




|||



Well, Notre Dame is on Ile de Cite, and the RER stop is called %26quot;St Michel/Notre Dame%26quot;, so guess what?




|||



Wilbar, the walk from the Notre Dame end of the RER station platform to the left bank is literally just the length of an RER train. We%26#39;re not talking about a long walk here.




|||



I am very interested in this post because we will be arriving at the St-michel station with suitcases.



There is another VERY confusing post running about exiting the St Michel/Notre Dame metro by escalator so can we get this clear (sorry!)



As I understand it.



You get on the RER B train at CDG in the end carraige and alight at St-Michel Notre Dame station. You then follow the signs for Notre Dame and this will take you up three levels by escalator to the entrance outside Notre Dame cathedral on the Ile de la Cite.



You can then walk across Rue de la Cite towards the left bank, to the Quai St-Michel. (As we are staying on Rue Git-le-Coeur we can then walk along the Quai de Grands-Augustins to our street or walk across Place St-Michel and through a little alleyway to Rue Git-le-Coeur.)



Sorry to appear so dim! is this right?




|||



Sorry I just read the other post again.



Is the exit with escalators signed Parvis de Notre Dame/Hopital Hotel Dieu, sortie 5? and on my map it%26#39;s less than 50 metres to the Quai St- Michel.




|||



Yes. Sortie 5 is correct.

Cab fare Gare du Nord to Les Gobelins?

We arrive via the Eurostar midday Dec 26th, our hotel is the Port Royal near the Les Gobelin metro.





I%26#39;ve always taken the metro, but this is her first time and I thought we might splurge on a cab.





Approximate cost??





Thanks




|||



Probably around 25 Euros, maybe less. We always take a taxi from Gare du Nord to our hotel in central Paris. The ride is hassle free and the famous monuments are on the horizon as you pass over the Seine. Spectacular!! Les Gobelin is not that far from Jardin du Luxembourg in the 13th eme.





oprah44




|||



Depending on the time of day, vageries of surface traffic, the average metered fare for a TAXI PARISIAN from the regular taxi rank at PARIS-Gare du Nord to the PORT ROYAL HÔTEL, 8 Blvd. Port Royal, 75005, near LES GOBELINS Metro should run 13€-17€.




|||



I would say minimum 15 at the very least, and up to 25 euros




|||



babba says %26lt;%26lt;%26lt;I%26#39;ve always taken the metro, but this is her first time and I thought we might splurge on a cab.%26gt;%26gt;%26gt;





This particular taxi ride is not really splurging. It%26#39;s part of the adventure. Wets the appetite for what is to come.




|||



Old Traveller...its certainly splurging for me...given that the metro will take me directly to Place D%26#39;Italie and then a short walk down the hill to the hotel. A cab will be at least the cost of a carnet.





But, as I%26#39;ve said..its her first time and maybe the splurge is worth it.




|||



Please make sure that you stand in the train station%26#39;s taxi line. You will notice tons of taxi%26#39;s sitting outside but if they are not in the official area/line, they will charge you 50% more.




|||



The regular taxi rank at Gare du Nord is fairly easy to find. You simply walk to the end of your EUROSTAR arrival platform...turn right onto the main concourse of the station...and walk straight ahead for 20-30 yards...until you bump into the TAXI sign.





If there%26#39;s any %26#39;trick%26#39; to this, it is that when Eurostar trains arrive, there is often a greater than usual demand for taxis...so it%26#39;s a good idea not to dawdle between train and taxi rank.





Of course, while you are at Gare du Nord, you could decide to run some %26#39;..housekeeping..%26#39; errands. You could stop at the Paris Tourism WELCOME booth at the station to purchase the PARIS MUSEUM PASS (if that%26#39;s part of your plan). You could also stop at the lower level Metro station to purchase CARNETs or transportation passes; stop at a newsstand to pick up a current issue of PARISCOPE magazine to find out what%26#39;s on, where, when, while you%26#39;re in Paris; and a copy of one of the l%26#39;Indispensable PARIS PAR ARRONDISSEMENT, BUS or BUS PARISIEN compact mapbooks (very detailed).




|||



KDK





You actually read my mind..if there%26#39;s a lineup for cabs I%26#39;ll do most of those things...get our Navigo Decouverte%26#39;s, p/u maps etc..while i%26#39;m waiting for the rush to die down.





Tha being said its a Sunday morning, so I%26#39;m hopeful that there%26#39;s not much of a run on cabs..




|||



I have just been quoted 65 Euro from Taxi-Paris.net. for the same ride. They will meet you in the arrival hall with your name on a card. Am I being ripped off or this is normal for this sort of service? Sounds like I would be better off standing in the line.

vacationinparis

has anyone stayed in unit #221? how was it?




|||



I hope this suggestion helps. After we selected our apartment from vacationinparis, I called them and asked if they had the email addresses for anyone who had used it recently and would be willing to share their opinion. I got one really useful reply that way.



I think the #221 apartment is pretty new to VIP, so there may not be many who have stayed there. It looks very nice in the photos, and has a great location.




|||



Sorry I can%26#39;t help with your query, but I was interested in your opinion of VacationinParis? Did everything go ok with them, were there any problems, and would you recommend them to a friend. We are considering renting with them now and I would appreciate any advice you may have. Thanks.




|||



We rented from VIP last November and had a fabulous experience. I highly recommend their services. We stayed in 191 on Ile St, Louis. Beautiful apt in a beautiful location.




|||



I second the great experience with VIP. I stayed in one of their apartments in the Marais last September. I will most definitely use them again in the future!




|||



VIP has been around for at least 10 years and they are very professional. I don%26#39;t think they own any of the apartments so the service can vary somewhat from apartment to apartment as it depends on the owner however I do think VIP weeds out bad apartment owners pretty fast.

CURRENT price taxi from Orly to Gare de Lyon?

I have read so many posts regarding the taxi prices. Has anyone taken this route this year to know the current prices? Are there different taxis with different prices? My first time in Paris soon -- and wondering if I should take a taxi or reserve a shuttle. Might be a little too confusing for me to take public transportation my first moments in Paris! (I am traveling solo and will have one bag.)




|||



If you are solo, you should try the mass transit route as it is pretty easy. You take the ORLY VAL to the RER B and then take the RER B into the city. You can look at the metro map at http://www.ratp.fr to scope it out along with





aeroportsdeparis.fr/ADP/…





I would guess that a taxi is between 40 and 45 euros depending a lot on where you are going. What is your final destination address as that might influence people%26#39;s thoughts about what to take.





If you take a taxi, just go to the taxi stand (don%26#39;t go with people who walk up to you, etc.). You can even print out the address and hand it to the driver if you don%26#39;t speak french.





Hope you have a good trip ... my wife%26#39;s business has a good connection with Allentown and my brother and wife went to school near there!

one day tours in Normandy

Hi everybody,this is Jane in a quandary!!!



need real insight what could be seen with some good lunches in one day?!



our cruise arr.Le Havre on August 9 at 7:00am and lv. 8:00pm. We have 12-13 hrs.



Next day, Monday. August 10 arr.7:00am to Cherbourg and leaves 6:00pm sharp. We are very interested in Normandy -Honfleur,Dauville, Trouville, Bayeux, Calvados etc. Any help would be appreciated+thanked.




|||



Hi -





I would say that the first step is to find out what tours are available through your cruise. That will tell you what%26#39;s possible in terms of time and distance from each port. Then, you%26#39;ll have the information that will allow you to decide whether or not to tour on your own.




|||



The cruise ships at La havre do trips to the d-day beaches. There are two formats depending on the cruise line.



I think the ship you%26#39;re on the Exuinox does Point du Hoc, Omaha, brief stop at Arromanches then lunch at the Memorial and visit.





They also do trips to Honfleur but not Trouville Deauville.



There are usually trips to a distillery as well.





The day at Cherbourg is limited in time.





If you want to get several different sites in you must go for a private driver guide.





At Omaha beach there%26#39;s the %26#39;Omaha%26quot; restaurant which is a fine restaurant.




|||



THX all of you. We`ve been on the beaches and now just want a nice day, take it easy, enjoy the plage and perhaps a good lunch in Honfleur or Dauville. We found nothing from the ship, so we`d ready for a bus but can`t find the schedule for Sunday!



Thanks and regards, Jane




|||



Public transport outside of towns or non intercity is practically non existant in France.



Your best bet is to rent a car from Rent a car Le Havre %26lt;le_havre@rentacar.fr%26gt;



Then you can visit Honfleur, Trouville, Deauville, Beuvron en Auge, Lisieux.



Honfleur has plenty of choice of restaurants around the port.Trouville aswell.



For a Calvados visit there%26#39;s Père Magloire at Pont L%26#39;Eveque or Château du Breuill near Lisieux.




|||



cpmac, I was just starting to do some research for my 19 yr old son who would need public transportation. I thought there was the BusVert system that he could use to sightsee on his own? What would be the best way to tour the area for a few days? He%26#39;s been in Arles for a 6 wk French summer program, so he should be able to communicate pretty well. Thanks for any advice. BB




|||



THX to all of you for trying to guide us. It is not easy, I know, done search to figure out Sunday bus schedule from and back to LeHavre from Honfleur or Dauville. Our ship stays 7am to 9pm in LeHavre. So, we are still working on it. Best regards to everyone.Jane




|||



BB



the site for bus vert is



http://www.busverts.fr/





The site is quite good. You can download the timetables in pdf. The problem is the buses pass once every 2, 3 or sometimes 5 hours, so you waste so much time and can visit so few sites. Your son should take a minibus d-day tour from Bayeux and use the buses or trains to get to towns for day or half day visits.




|||



cpmac,



Sorry for the delay in thanking you for the bus information. As it turns out my son will spend a few days in Paris and is then heading to Munich. I hope he makes it to Normandy someday since it%26#39;s so beautiful. Best, BB




|||



Hello. I am in similar situation to Jane except our cruise ship arrives Honfleur on Friday 4 September. I wanted to hire a car to drive to Bayeux and the Normandy Beaches but I can%26#39;t find a company that rents cars in Honfleur.





Does anybody know of one or could suggest a private guide?




|||



I know rent a car supplies cars at the Le Havre pier I don%26#39;t know if they can do the same thing at Honfleur. Ask them at



le_havre@rentacar.fr





At Honfleur there%26#39;s MAry location (peugeot garage)





groupemary.fr/groupemary/groupe_mary_implant…





I can send you a list of driver guides in a PM.

tour de france

Hi! This is my first time writing so I hope I%26#39;m doing this in the right spot!





My husband and I are traveling to Europe next year about June, and plan to watch a couple of days of the Tour de France. My problem is, the route of the Tour isn%26#39;t out yet... does anyone know when it comes out and how that will work with booking flights/accom etc. I realise we%26#39;re coming in peak time, so don%26#39;t want to leave it too late, but want to plan around the Tour a bit.





Thanks :)




|||



The Tour is usually the first two weeks of July (or thereabouts) An overview of the route is usually published October, but tyhe detailed plan happens in January/Frebruary

weather in April

I will be in Paris in late April 2010, at commencement of a 21 day Evergreen tour.



I would welcome any input from person(s)who may have undertaken similar trip rthis year regarding likely weather for this period of the tour???

Jamin

Will be in Paris in early Oct. Anyone who has eaten at Jamin found a restaurant that is comparable??

Villefranche - Nice - Eze

I arrive into Villefranche on Friday 28th August on a cruise. I was hoping to visit Nice and Eze whilst there. We have 10 hours in port. What is the best option - to visit Nice first and then Eze? Is it possible to visit both on the one day? What buses or trains are available for these journeys?



Many thanks.



Scott.




|||



do not use train



the best is by bus







eze : 2 or 3 hours



Nice : 4 or 5 hours







from villefranche





bus 100 towards monaco - menton until eze-sur-mer



+ bus 83 to eze village





bus 82 or 112 from eze village to Nice center





bus 100 from Nice center to villefranche

Train Schedule with Timetables

Can recommend where I can fina a Train Schedule with a breakdown of the times for the Line that runs Grasse to Ventimiglia ... Thanks for the help ...




|||



The pdf will be downloaded from this url:





http://tinyurl.com/ktq4hp





The page with the local timetables to dowload is here:





http://tinyurl.com/q23r36

Meze, France

I will be staying in Meze, France in June 2008 and have a million questions to ask.






|||



Well ask your questions! One of my own. Why Meze?




|||



I go to Meze at least once or twice a year. There are several great restaurants.




|||



What do you want to know about Meze, other than its small, it has a harbour, it has a beach, its on a lagoon, loads of sea food restaurants. I love the place.




|||



Lovely Place - loads of restaurants around a very pretty harbour. We stayed at Hotel de la Pyramide - have put a review on here about it - can highly recommend it - Owner speaks english too.



Carol




|||



I%26#39;m traveling to this area in July 08 and am looking for a recommendation on a good place to stay along the coast - travelling probably by car from Toulouse - looking to crash on nice sandy beach for three days - anyone recommend somewhere???




|||



Marseillan Plage is very popular with the French and has a good beach.Or you could try Agde or Sete.




|||



Interestingly, I was in this area on Sunday.





A few points :





The coastline is sandy from the Rhone to the Pyrenees with the exception of Sete and Cap d%26#39;Agde where rocky headlands produce sandy coves.





Bouzigues, Balaruc, Meze, Marseillan beaches are on the lagoon.





Marseillan Plage, Vias, Serignan, Frontignan Plage %26amp; Sete are ocean beaches.





All have seafood restaurants !





Sete is a major fishing and ferry port.





Lagoon resorts specialise in mussels %26amp; oysters.





Cap d%26#39;Agde is the most lively.





Bouziques and Meze are relatively calm.





All are busy during school holidays.





All are hot, clear %26amp; sunny during the summer.





All are close to Montpelliers %26amp; Bezier airports - all are close to the A9+ autoroute - Sete has a railway station.





Photos of the region : the-languedoc-page.com/photos/languedoc-phot…





Peter














|||



thank you all for your replies, much appreciated. The ocean beaches sound cool, i like the sound of the Marsellan beach... do you happen to know any good hotels within walking distance to the beach? I am travelling down from Toulouse / Albi direction and am wondering if i need to hire a car to get to this beach? Thank you




|||



Does anybody know is the fair as in fair ground children love is on in Meze this Aug 2009 in Meze any if so any dates



Cheers



Jane




|||



The Meze fete is August 19-24 2009





Peter

Idnight - Train !!

Has anyone had an experience on the Idnight train. We want to take the overnight from Nice to Paris.





What is the luggage polcy !



Do they allow 2 baggages per person !!





I was just checking the prices - it shows first class and 2nd class as the same price of 27 Euros. Is there something hidden in this, or its just too good to be true.





Pls Help




|||





Sometimes you just get a good deal!





2 bags per person is not a problem.




|||



Thanks




|||



A friend of a friend of mine - [a real one not an urban legend one ] took the idTGv recently and has already booked up again .



They loved it.





Apparently its possible to change %26#39;ambiances%26#39; during the trip- so if you sign up for the %26#39;night%26#39; or party section and then fancy a zen [silent] experience you can transfer between them by asking the train staff.




|||



Me and a friend of mine are also planning to take this IDtrain but from Paris to Nice 9th of May





We would like to know which way is it better; to book a place from silent cabin or party one? I mean is it more possile to have a chance to visit party place if feels like it or get a place to sleep if get tired? =D





How early we should book the trip?





hoping for little advices;





---2girls from Finland--




|||



You can change between the sections from silent to gaming/dvd to party during the trip - you just have to ask the staff





If tickets for your travel dates are up on the website i would book it now




|||



thank you!!







=)




|||



%26quot;Is there something hidden in this, or its just too good to be true.%26quot;





Nothing hidden in this, it is a low cost offer from SNCF. But you should know that iDZEN and iDZAP choice is for trips in the day only. iDNIGHT is a train for people who like to party; as you can%26#39;t sleep, it is mostly dedicated to young people:



http://www.idtgv.com/en/who-are-we





There is a luggage restriction actually (unlike %26quot;normal%26quot; TGV) : you can have 2 luggage per person or one luggage and one %26quot;other thing%26quot; such as a stroller, a bicycle, a snowboard, etc:



idtgv.com/en/…bagages





If you need to take more luggage, you pay an additionnal cost of 35€ per piece (2 extar ieces max).




|||



Its not jkust young folk from what i%26#39;ve heard plus



you have the option of silence with idZEN





from the site



iDzen means that you can travel in complete peace and quiet, guaranteed by our supervisor. What is the secret of the iDZen carriages? A good behaviour charter that each passenger promises our supervisor to respect. This ensures that you can travel in perfect peace and quiet.





Also you can watch dvds with earphones in idZen -and the machines and films can be hired from the bar




|||



If you look at the site, you%26#39;ll see that iDZEN and IDZEN choice is for day time schedule only. With iDNIGHT, you don%26#39;t have this choice.




|||



It says iDNight also means a Lounge carriage for peace and quiet: you can sleep here or play in the most restful silence possible!





You can also hire dvds and play board games etc on the night train







I thought these were considered the Zen and zap ambiance and what was meant by being able to change between ambiances on the night train.

Marais bistro/restaurant for adult AND kid?

We are two adults who enjoy eating out but have a child who can be a bit fussy. We would like to have perhaps a nice lunch dining experience but one which would also cater for a child. Any ideas much appreciated. Thanks.




|||



Try the Place du Marche St. Catherine - close to the Rue de Turenne. Pretty little Village Square atmosphere - its hard to believe you%26#39;re in Paris - more like a little village somewhere in the south. A collection of little restaurants - perfect for lunch - safe for a child to play. Ate there twice last September.




|||



o2 that sounds absolutely perfect. Googled it and it looks perfect too. What a pretty square! Thank you so much for telling me about it. We%26#39;ll definitely be eating there!




|||



The best place on that square is the one towards the southeast (I can%26#39;t recall the name) or if you are coming there from rue Rivoli, it the first one to your right. They have both outdoor and indoor seating.




|||



Thank you Elzevir. I did google restaurants in the square and came up with some good reviews. I%26#39;ll check that one out on google maps!

monaco casino

hi how much is it to get into the casino in monaco




|||



that%26#39;s depend at what would you like to play and which casino



there are 4 or 5 different in Monaco





all have free entrance and some charges you after depending the game




|||



10 euros per person for Casino de Monte-Carlo. Here%26#39;s the link www.montecarlocasinos.com/




|||



Just to add - the free entrance at the grand Monte Carlo Casino - I guess that%26#39;s the one everyone knows - is only to an array of slot machines - machines a sous. The tables and gambling games %26quot;proper%26quot; are within the grand salle and as said its a ten euro entrance fee and you will be expected to pass a dress code - collar and tie basically, and not sportswear and baseball cap backwards.

Twin comforters

I%26#39;ve been looking for toile twin comforters here and haven%26#39;t had any luck, so I%26#39;ll be looking in Paris during my upcoming stay. Is the size of a twin comforter in France the same as in the US?





Thanks in advance




|||



Parisians buy theirs at Ikea. You could check the Ikea website for sizes.




|||



There are two types of bedcoverings here --





There%26#39;s a comforter (a couette here), which is thick and puffy and is filled with polyfill, down, or some combination. Those are white, and are then buttoned into a cotton cover (housse de couette) which has the colors, patterns, etc.





You%26#39;ll see these sold as duvet covers in the States.





Then there%26#39;s a bedcovering -- what we call just a bedspread.





There really isn%26#39;t any such thing here as a patterned polyfill bedspread, which is what I think you%26#39;re referring to.





And yes, I bought my comforters at Ikea....




|||



The twin sizes may be a bit different here. Measure an old twin comforter in centimeters before you leave, and that will help you find the right French size. I believe that you will have different size choices in the length of the comforter.





BHV at the métro station Hotel de Ville on line #1 would be a good place to shop in Paris. You would have to go out of Paris to shop IKEA.




|||



The OP can shop IKEA in Atlanta -- the merchandise appears to be nearly the same worldwide.





If anybody had them, it would be BHV, but I wouldn%26#39;t get my hopes up too high.




|||



On the academic end of things, however, I have put US twin-sized sheets on European beds many, many times -- they%26#39;re not exactly the same size, but they%26#39;re close enough that it works with no problems at all.




|||



And I will repeat that the Ikea site for any country will have have exact European measurements.




|||



I%26#39;m putting BHV on my list. We do have an IKEA in Atlanta and her beds currently have IKEA duvets on them. Any suggestions on how to translate the French IKEA site into English? The English link on the site seems to translate that page. Would the UK%26#39;s twins be the same as one purchased in France?





I guess I should ask if there would be any chance that Paris would have more toile availability than here. It seems that trend has passed here except for kids and I don%26#39;t want pink for her room.




|||



Not much toile -- you can find it, to be sure, but I wouldn%26#39;t call it common. It seems to be relegated to places that grandmothers shop, because the younger generations go for brighter colors and geometric prints, to a large degree. (Not absolute, of course -- but that%26#39;s most of what I see.)





I found these online:





www.home-decorating-co.com/toile-bedding.html





http://toilebeddingandlinens.com/





jcpenney.com/products/aq/red-toile-comforter…

Info on Vaujany anyone?

My friends and I are interested in skiing in Vaujany and I would appreciate any information but particularly regarding access to green runs and also public transport from nearest airport. We don%26#39;t fancy hiring a car.




|||



Hi there - a good option is to take either a bus from grenoble airport to Vaujany itself or a transfer taxi provided for by Bensbus.com - Access to Green runs in the village is pretty easy - no real ski in ski out as most of the village area faces the slopes and is not on the slopes so its matter of a small lift from the village - great service, easy and quick with little queuing in my experience! bon chance!





Martyn, www.vaujanychalet.com




|||



Thanks Martyn - we%26#39;ve moved forward a bit since I posted the request and have a booked an apartment in Vaujany - unfortunately we can%26#39;t fly to Grenoble from our local airport (Newcastle) so are having to fly into Chambery. I have yet to find a reasonable deal on public transport to Vaujany from Chambery so I guess we are going to have to be brave and hire a car!





I am pleased to hear that there are some accessible green runs for our beginners and I gather it%26#39;s easy enough to get to Alpe D%26#39;Huez. You wouldn%26#39;t happen to know if there are ski lockers at the top of the lifts would you? We had them in El Tarter and they were a godsend.



Susan




|||



Hi Susan,





Not sure about lockers at the top of the lifts - never seen any but there the ski shop close to Vaujany%26#39;s main lift system (Atou Sport) run by Thierry is a good place for you to leave things if you hire from him of course!.





Have a great trip and hope to be able to help you out in the future,







Martyn



www.vaujanychalet.com




|||



Susan - one more thing ... you could try http://www.alp-line.com for transfer to Vaujany from Chambery (about 1.5 hours easy, (mostly motorway) drive. They are running a 30% discount for winter transfers booked before end August...





bon chance



Martyn





www.vaujanychalet.com




|||



Thanks so much for your help Martyn. I love this site for allowing you to be in contact with people %26#39;in the know%26#39;. It makes booking trips independently much more reassuring, although the lady who we are renting the accommodation from seems very helpful also. I think we will take your advice and rent from the ski shop nearest to the lifts so we can leave stuff there overnight - I%26#39;m afraid us girls are all for the easy life.





I%26#39;ve checked with alp-line and also with skicab.com who are a little bit cheaper still.





Do you have a view on the reliability of either of these operators?

One bedroom apartment in Biarritz centre.

Can anyone recommend a one bedroomed apartment to rent for a week in the centre of Biarritz. Looking for somewhere modern and not too expensive.




|||



Victoria Surf, www.victoriasurf.com





At least that%26#39;s where I always stay!





It%26#39;s pricey in the summer, but has very good off-season prices.




|||



Thanks Stockmos. I had looked at these before and I wasn%26#39;t sure though. They looked a bit 1970%26#39;s and tired, especially in the photographs. I note that you can choose sea view or city view. Have you stayed in the city view side? There appears to be a big price differential.





I also read somewhere that there are long term residents there?

Loire Valley trip October - suggestions please!

Hi all, I am visiting the Loire Valley in October and would just like a few suggestions on places the visit if possible.



At this stage it will just be my husband and myself, however we might also be joined by one other couple. We will have our own hire car and will not be pre-booking any accommodation (as per my post a few weeks ago).



Ok, so we will have very limited time, and the more I search the net the more I wish we had extra days to explore. This is our %26#39;rough%26#39; itinerary at the moment.



Oct 9 - train to Versailles, pick up hire car, few hours through chateau, drive to Chartres, visit Cathedral, drive to Vendome area for overnight



Oct 10 - drive to Blois area, check out Chambord (won%26#39;t go in), Cheverny (go inside), spare time, overnight in Blois



Oct 11 - drive to Montrichard, Bourre and Chenonceau, possibly overnight here or in Tours



Oct 12 - not sure if we should go further south to Chinon, or somewhere else. We have to drop the hire car back at Tours after 2pm and take the train back to Paris.



We definitely want to see several chateaus, but we also want to visit a few wineries, troglodyte village/s and anything else that takes our fancy.



I have looked at the www.loirevalleytourism.com website, but still need further help.



Can anyone please advise on any little gems that they have found in the area, or suggestions for itinerary?



Thanks for your help :)



Cath






|||



Why would you go all that way just to see the outside of Chambord and not go in?





You won%26#39;t see much more than in the photos unless you park your car and go into the chateau grounds. The village is blocked off to cars, so you can%26#39;t really get up close just by passing by.





Chambord is really beautiful and the double helix staircase is incredible.





If you are staying in Vendome you can easily do both Chambord and Cheverny in one day.





If you have to be back in Tours for 2.00pm, how about an early morning visit Villandry?




|||



I would think about staying in Amboise. It is handy being in the middle of the valley. We only had a couple of days and did not get to Chambord. I would go in, if I was you. Chevery is very worth while Chenonceau is fabulous. A highlight of our trip to France. The gardens and the grounds surpass Cheverny and I expect Chambord ( Chambord is stark but much bigger). The gardens at Villandry are NOT to be missed. Simply stunning. Go into this chateau as well, for itself and for the view of the gardens.



We drove to Usse and Asay de Rideau. Very nice drive. We drove through Tours. It rained. To be avoided...just another large town.




|||



I%26#39;m dissappointed that anyone could think of Tours as %26#39;just another large town%26#39;. Then again, stunning medeival architecture, grand buildings, beautiful riverbank scenery, fantastic ambience, brilliant café society feel in Place Plumerau and superlative shopping is the norm in New Zealand is it not? ;)




|||



Hmmm, seems a few people are a bit hot and bothered over some of the comments...



Let me rephrase by saying - we don%26#39;t have unlimited time, we only have 3 days so we have to squeeze as much in as possible (without going overboard).



I really want to go inside Chambord and have a proper look around, but several posts over the last few months have advised that with limited time Chambord isn%26#39;t that great as its empty inside (I believe I am remembering right?), and there are others that are privately owned and furnished.



Not that that makes a huge difference, we are wanting to %26#39;see%26#39; the Chateaus, not the furniture.



I am really looking forward to seeing Tours, I definitely want to spend a good few hours there walking around (unfortunately that%26#39;s all we%26#39;ll have), but just don%26#39;t know realistically how much time we will have.



So anyway, back to my original request:



Are there are any wineries, troglodyte villages, etc that are %26#39;must sees%26#39; in the areas we will going??



Thanks again,



Cath :)



P.S. although Aus is great, there is NOTHING like visiting Europe and the beautiful buildings!




|||



The best way to %26quot;do%26quot; troglodyte villages, wineries, etc, is just to find them for yourself as you drive. Most village in the Loire valey and surrounds have troglodyte dwellings, and most of the villages and hamlets have %26quot;caves%26quot; (wine cellars) and wineries - especially the area between St Aignan and Chinon.





I would drive further than Vendome for the first night - nice enough place in attractive surrounds, but a bit %26quot;middle of nowhere%26quot;. I would go for 2 nights in Blois, taking the N10/D294. Chartres-Blois by that route is about 20 minutes longer than Chartres-Vendome.





I would not bother trying to get to Chinon and back before 2.00 on the last day If, by that stage, you havent seen any troglodyte places try driving to Rochecorbon on the north bank of the loire about 3km from Tours, otherwise use that time for exploring Tours.





Simon



http://daysontheclaise.blogspot.com/




|||





I think most of the comments about not visiting Chambord have been regarding people trying to do a flying Loire visit from Paris for a day.





With your schedule, you should have lots of time to go in. Although it is mostly empty the scale is vast and amazing and the stairs worth seeing. Don%26#39;t miss going up on the roof, not only for the views but because the decoration etc up there is something to behold.





Rob




|||



%26lt;%26lt;but several posts over the last few months have advised that with limited time Chambord isn%26#39;t that great as its empty inside %26gt;%26gt;





I certainly have not seen these posts or more accurately perhaps is that I have not seen comments like this from writers who really know this area.





There is really only one château that is furnished and that is Cheverny. The owner of Ussé has made an effort to furnish the interior but it appears a lack of funds has left the effort underwhelming if not tacky. Most all of the châteaux were ransacked during the revolution, their interiors particularly were destroyed (with the notable exception of Chenonceau although little is left inside there now). If you are headed to the Loire Valley in anticipation of seeing opulent displays of wealth, art, and antiques you will certainly be disappointed.





One does not visit Chambord because of its furnishings or lack thereof; rather he visits because of the architecture, much of which was designed by da Vinci himself who was responsible for innovations such as the double helix staircase at the structure%26#39;s interior core. Compare this staircase with the traditional staircase at Chenonceau. I consider Chambord the most awe inspiring of all the châteaux.





Another common misconception made by casual observers is that Tours is just another large city. Actually with just a few hundred thousand inhabitants, it%26#39;s not a large city at all and although its urban periphery is not particularly charming, central Tours is a pleasure to experience: Place Plumereau and its cafés, rue Colbert and its restaurants, and the cathedral and the Musée des Beaux-Arts - all of these elements make Tours an unforgettable visit for those taking the time to seek them out.





The Loire Valley should not be a check-list destination. Visiting here will give you all that you put into the experience. A little bit of research and familiarization with its history before you arrive will result in a much more relevant and satisfying experience.




|||



Thanks Sarastro.... based on your comments we will have to visit the old center of Tours.... you made it sound quite interesting!




|||



The most popular chateaux have been named, but my favorite is Valencay.




|||



%26quot;There is really only one château that is furnished and that is Cheverny%26quot;





I have to disagree with this statement from Sarastro, although it is probaly true of the most well known chateaux of the Loire. However, if you include some of the lessor known chateaux, away from the massed tourists, there are other chateaux with beautiful period furniture.





The chateau at Montcontour is furnished, and although it is still privately owned, the owner does allow visitors.





However, in my opinion, Azay-le-Ferron has the best furniture I have seen in any Loire Chateaux, including Cheverny.





It is not on the regular %26quot;chateaux circuit%26quot; or lists, so does tend to get overlooked. Even though I have lived in this area for over thirteen years, I had not heard of it until recently, so we went there last week, and were very impressed. It has a priceless collection of original furniture dating from Louis XIII to Louis Philippe, with some very good Empire pieces.

Getting the best out of 2 weeks London/Paris/Italy........

My son is going to London in June 2010 as the first leg of a round the world trip. He is modelling here in OZ and needs to check some agencies in Europe and USA as well as have his first experience outside of Australasia. He is 21 and going alone. As much as he needs to set appointments with agencies he would also like to get a taste of the continent. Any suggestions on an itinerary for Paris/Milan/Rome and also being able to check out the likes of Florence and some of the French coast line........(he is not particularly keen on architecture or art, more the lifestyle) he will probably only have 2 weeks in total before heading to the states.




|||



Considering his age and lack of foreign experience I would strongly suggest that he limits its trips to few places, i.e the towns where he has/ will have appointments.



Being in a totally different environment will be enough of a shock without having to run the gauntlet of a train trip and a new hotel every day or so.





Based on my experience--been there, done that-- one learn much more about a country by staying in one town for at least 4-5 days than by seeing 3 towns in 5 days.



As it is London, Paris, Milan (the centre of the fashion world) would take the whole 2 weeks, including travelling from one to the other, and yet one would barely have time to become familiar with these places.



Don%26#39;t forget that he needs to finds in advance exactly where an appointment will take place by doing a dry run from his hotel to that place the day before or the morning of the same day. Each appointment will take time, leaving less time for sightseeing.








|||



Thanks, I am guessing that doing something like a contiki tour say London to Rome, while it may give him a glimpse of the country it may not give him the time to get to the appointments he needs to..........




|||



Contiki tours, like all tours, are not flexible at all (ca.contiki.com/tours/136-london-paris-rome) I couldn%26#39;t find one that included Milan..and the 2 weeks ones covering 4 or 5 countries of Western Europe are a nightmare in my opinion..



A colleague did several European tours (not Contiki) as he and his mom were terrified by the idea of doing it on their own.. he barely remember where they went, only that they rode buses for most of the day every day and only had minutes to take a photo at many spots. No time at all to find out how the locals live..





You and your son will need to do a lot more internet research, besides asking a travel agency for help.. Appointments should be pre-booked well in advance of course. No point showing up unexpected and having to give one %26#39;s portfolio to a busy secretary that has no decision-making power..and has seen thousands of good looking hopefuls.





The appointments schedule will dictate the whole itinerary.. how to travel between towns is the next hurdle (trains or cheap flights?) and finally there are accomodations..hostels in some places, cheap hotels in others, perhaps one %26quot;splurge%26quot; in a semi-fancy place by the end.





I went to Finland at 21 (from the South of France), as part of a (whole summer long)student exchange program and it was a challenge at first as I couldn%26#39;t read or speak Suomalainen (Finnish) and my spoken English was very basic.





I did have the prior experience of studying away from my family, in a part of France where the French spoken there wasn%26#39;t quite the same as the one we spoke back home, so being alone in a strange place wasn%26#39;t a huge shock.





Another reason why %26quot;a town a day%26quot; might be a hardship for your son.. it is nice to be in the same room for several days and to go to the same cafe and restaurant everyday.




|||



Thanks again, your advice is pretty much confirming my thoughts. All agency appointments will be set way before his trip, they will have digitals to decide if they are interested in meeting and although his look is good for Europe his height could pose a problem, his comp cards are 6%26#39;3%26quot; however reality is closer to 6%26#39;4-6%26#39;5%26quot;, so while he can get away with it here and possibly the States, Europe could be a completely different story...........It sounds as though you have had modelling experience also?




|||



noniv, Thank you so very much for the compliment... you made my day, my whole week..I will walking on clouds..





A model??? I was the family ugly duckling, with more pimples as a teen than all the boys in our long street..mind you I was always at the top of the class and did have friends.





My younger brother was the cute one, who blossomed into a truly good looking young man. Unfortunately he was extremely bothered by all the unwanted attention he got from all sorts of people and didn%26#39;t have a happy time in his teens and 20s..



After 40 everything evened out.. we both became pleasantly plain...





One thing I am is a rather organized person that use common sense and logic to solve issues.



My parents often joked that many people dream to run away with a circus to become a lion tamer or a trapeze artist..while if I did run away, it would be to make the schedules, routines and payroll of the circus..




|||



LOL! That is gold, friends and top of the class is a pretty neat combo.



Fortunately my boy handles the attention with ease and thankfully in the mean time he has a very real family to keep him well grounded.



Actually it is though he was born for this kind of gig. Takes it in his stride, is extremely comfortable in his skin without being full of himself, makes him all the more desirable in the industry.



Yes age is definitely an equaliser when it comes to the looks department.......he may as well milk it while he can. In the mean time he does have a regular job and is completing a business degree.





Any hoo back to the travel stuff, he also wants to go to Ibiza.........I think he will be flying with easyjet and backpacking, he can make his appointments in Milan/Rome and just enjoy himself. I really think because of his height that he will be more of a chance in USA anyway.

One day to Paris - Need advice re: transp & sightseeing

Would really appreciate some advice - I%26#39;m arriving in Paris CDG for a one night layover from AF flight; then flying next day AF to Rome. My first time, can%26#39;t walk long distances.





A few questions:





1. My Hotel is near airport (Kyriad Prestige Roissy)- so what I plan to do is take the hotel shuttle if I can find it or a taxi to check in and leave bags. AF arrives Term 2? what is the walk like to get a taxi?





2. I%26#39;ll have all afternoon, so I%26#39;d really like to take a 2-3 hour Paris City Tour - a sit down narrated style - any recommendations? I was looking at Les Cars Rouges on the web - since it has a stop at Opera and the Roissybus from CDG goes to Opera, I thought that would be easiest to get to. Is that reasonable? Any further info on Roissybus - easy to locate at airport? Then I%26#39;d have to do in reverse to get back to airport and to hotel. I plan to arrive back by late afternoon.





3. Finally, my flight out from CDG to Rome on AF departs 9:45am, Term B - should I plan a hotel shuttle (very close to airport) 2 hours prior, or more? what%26#39;s the process at CDG from Paris to Rome?





thanks to all of you and appreciate any and all help. I feel the more I can learn in advance, the better it will be.




|||



hi !





For the shuttle to CDG contact with the hotel depending on the hours for taxis as well (usually they do not take reservations short distance)





2.For visit paris I too can not contact you unless there are cars and red cars OpenTour I leave room for your professional lol





3.For shuttle back trying to find a company where you can book (1h30 before off, because you are already in the zone of Roissy CDG).

restaurants

going to Antibe for a week in June, sick of %26#39;Tourist Restaurants%26#39; selling usual beach resort meals, chips with everything, want good, authentic, reasonably priced french food, any ideas!!




|||



There aren%26#39;t any %26#39;beach resort chips with everything %26#39; restaurants in Antibes so you are quite safe.





here are a few to get you started







la Famiglia -italian/french



34 avenue Thiers 06600 Antibes



Tél:04 93 34 60 82





le JARDIN



5, rue sade 06600 Antibes



Tél:04.93.34.64.74



http://www.restaurant-lejardin.fr





le brulot and le brulot pasta



http://www.brulot.com/







Crêperie Le Clémenceau - sweet and savoury crepes





24, Rue Georges Clemenceau





le veil Antibes bressrerie - next door to creperie le clemenceau by the fountain , staff can be a bit sullen in summer but good for lunch - omelettes etc




|||



Ditto what Selkie has said about the restaurants, you will be quite safe.





Le Brulot looks interesting, thanks.





We have also tried quite a few times %26#39;Tire Bouchon%26#39; right in the corner of Place Nationale which we liked and a restaurant with a name something like Cote d%26#39;os? it is in the street off to the right just before you get to Place Nationale, it is good for meat dishes, steaks, lamb and kebabs (not the kind you get in the Bigg Market with Pitta bread!)




|||



I recommend Le Clafoutis, 18, Rue Thuret, in the old town.



This is a small restaurant, 4-5 tables inside, 3-4 outside serving wonderful authentic food at a reasonable price. I think we paid 28 euros each for 4 courses. They do not take credit cards.




|||



Top 5 for me are:





The terrace garden in Le Cafe Jardin on Rue James Close. Superb trio of steak tartare and not expensive.





Le Village also on Rue James Close. Great fixed price menu.





Le Brulot on Rue Isnard. Massive portion of moules frites.





The Yacht Clubbers on Ave November 11th. Snails and frogs legs super fish and friendly waitress, terrace overlooking the harbour and fort





La Taille de Gueppe on Rue Fersen. The best of them all just go their and try anything it is superb.




|||



De Bacon was recommended to me for seafood...any comments from the experts? Looks quite pricey to me so wondering if it%26#39;s worth it?




|||



Obviously some contributors do not live, as I have for the past 20 years, in Antibes!!! Chips with everything, lousy so-called Salade Niçois etc., etc.- look no further than Antibes!! However, light has glimmered on the horizon in the shapes of L%26#39;Aubergine, rue Sade, Chamlika, also rue Sade, Brasserie 44, bvd Albert 1er, and L%26#39;Auberge Provençal, Place Nationale and last but not least La Daurade. We Antibois(e)also love the Tabac at the Marché and the Vieil Antibes - so stop knocking it!!!!! And forget the restaurants actually on Place Nationale, as well as some of the pretentious ones mentioned in reviews - better not name them in print!! So, fellow Geordie, trust my choices and you will love every morsel And don%26#39;t ( ever) start off asking if the staff speak English - try French first and you are halfway to their hearts.




|||



Restaurants that I regularly go to are Auberge Provencal, Michaelangelos, Mamalus, Brulot and Duplex.



In the summer months all the restaurants in Place National are probably not a good choice, they are there to serve the tourists.



Le Bacon is a lovely calm, posh oasis of a restaurant...as you walk in it feels %26#39;expensive%26#39; and is..very, but it must be up there in the list of restaurants with the best view. The service is brilliant.Last time we were there a table behind us had a small dog with them and instead of the waiter bringing over a tupperware bowl of water for it he bought a porcelain plate with a white doiley and silver bowl for it...only in France !



Another restaurant that can compete with Le Bacon is le Figiuer de St. Esprit in the Ramparts, or for service and views the hotel Belles Rives in Juan-les-Pins.




|||



Mention of Michelangelos reminds me that none other that Brad Pitt, Angelina Jolie and Quentin Tarantino broke bread together there only two weeks or so ago. Of course this and Bacon are on the expensive side. Selkie%26#39;s Le Brulot and its sister Le Brulot Pasta in the same street are a great find though - and more patrolised by locals than tourists.





Ed




|||



We will only be in Antibe for lunch, and since it will not be our main meal, we look for a light lunch fare restaurant. We are active 65 year olds, and do not eat heavy. Any recommendations, please?




|||



selkieNice%26#39;s list ( No.1 reply) is still a valid one. I particularly like Le Jardin - appropriately from its name it has a nice shady garden for lunch. Le Brulot and le Brulot Pasta are more nighttime spots. Le Clemenceau is closed. La Famiglia is a very good lunch spot - favoured especially by locals - but possibly may be bit off the tourist trail ( that%26#39;s why it%26#39;s good!) for you if you are in the Old Town - but still only about 15 minutes walk.





Edine.

Paris with a buggy?

I%26#39;m going to Paris next month (mid-August) for a week, with my partner and our two children aged five years and twenty months.





The twenty-month old can walk, of course, but there are times when he needs to be in his buggy. How easy is it to handle the metro with a buggy? It remains our best way of getting out to the areas we really want to go to.





We live in London, so we%26#39;re used to getting around the Tube, but they have things like wider ticket barriers here and I don%26#39;t know if the Parisians are so accommodating.




|||



I hope someone who has more knowledge will chime in. I have seen many people with young children on the metro. They tended to have those umbrella strollers and appeared to easily get ont an off of the metro with them. The problem is the stairs in the metros as I see it. You would have to fold up the stroller and carry it and the child up what is sometimes several stairs. I always thought I%26#39;d use one of those back-pack baby carriers if I had a baby in Paris.




|||



Everybody uses strollers. On metro stairs, completely anonymous Parisians will spontaneously pick up the front of your stroller with the kid in it to help you carry it up or down stairs.





On buses, stroller enter by the central door (which is usually the exit), and there is a place to park two of them.




|||



Hi --





I%26#39;m completely anonymous but not a Parisian, and I%26#39;m one of those folks who takes the front end of a stroller on the stairs, even when on vacation in Paris. It%26#39;s something that was much more common when I had a young child, but I%26#39;m glad to hear that at least in Paris it continues to be a practice. You don%26#39;t see it much anywhere else, any more, although I will continue to do it when the occasion arises.




|||



If there are two of you, it%26#39;s a non-issue --





Strollers can be a hassle, but they%26#39;re not impossible. A lightweight, folding stroller is most definitely a better option than a full-sized pram.





3Conils, in Canada and the US, it%26#39;s not that common because there are escalators and elevators...so there aren%26#39;t nearly as many women trying to struggle up three flights of stairs. Most folks hold doors, though -- which is a huge struggle with a stroller.





But there always seems to be a helping hand for women and their children on the Metro.




|||



Sorry, yes, I should have specified: it%26#39;s a lightweight Maclaren buggy, definitely more of a stroller than a pram.





Sounds like the situation is pretty much like in London. We have a lot of escalators here, but also a lot of stations with stairs (including my local stop), so my partner and I are used to struggling up the stairs together with Junior strapped into his seat.





Strangers in London will also offer to help a single woman trying to get a stroller up/down stairs. It%26#39;s funny how both cities have reputations for rudeness.





Thanks to everyone who replied; any more information would be most welcome.




|||



Take a look at the bus map on the ratp website www.ratp.fr You may find that for some journeys the bus is a viable alternative to the metro and will save you the hassle with stairs/escalators.



Buses have a wide seatless section in the middle which is intended for pushchairs - although at busy times of day this area can get very full of standing passengers.




|||



Pick up a copy of the little blue book %26quot;le Bus%26quot;, which has maps of all of the routes.




|||



We spent several weeks in Paris (4-yr and 18-mo) and utilized the metro quite a bit with our umbrella stroller. There are a handfull of metro stops that have escalators and elevators. Just look for them at each location since they could be a few walks away and easily missed (like them one next to the Notre Dame).





Here is what we figured out:



1. carry the child in the stroller up and down the stairs if he isn%26#39;t too heavy. Too much hassle taking them out and putting them back in after all that effort.



2. The RER stops have sliding ticket entries so your stroller should push through with no problems as long as it is standard and not wide.



3. Most metro stops do have a gate entry door so just ask the attendant. They%26#39;ll ask you to scan your ticket on an entry point first in most cases and then they will open it.



4. Buses are the easiest thing to do if it isn%26#39;t rush hour since they have nice locations to park the stroller with the kiddo in it near the back exit doors...but it is slower to get around the city.



5. Finally, what we figured out if all else fails is let your partner through the ticket turnstil first, tip the stroller back and push it through under the turnstil and your partner can grab and pull it through. Then you can walk on through next...works everytime!




|||



With smaller kids, I%26#39;ve also seen the adults just hand the stroller OVER the turnstile




|||



Just got back from Paris with our 2 kids (ages 3 and 22 month). We brought along 2 umbrella strollers - Maclaren Quest to be exact. In fact, most of the Maclarens we saw were the Quests.





We managed to use the metro system everyday we were there. Challenging the first day or two but once you get your own routine down it becomes quicker and easier to get around. The stations don%26#39;t all have escalators or elevators so yes, stairs are definitely the task. We found that we would just lock the brakes on one then carry the other down or up the stairs. We were very quick at it. Or we would take each one out, collapse the strollers and up or down we go. There were quite a few people that would kindly offer their help and that made our trip easier for us.





The escalators became very quick and easy for us.





Getting on the train was sometimes a pain because of the crowds. You find yourself scanning the train as it passes so you end up chasing after the cabins with the least people. We kept our kids in the strollers because it was way too difficult to carry the strollers, our bags, and hold our kid%26#39;s hands and make sure they didn%26#39;t lose their balance. Much safer with them in the stroller and we can also keep an eye on our bags, too! Sometimes the gap between the platform and the train was very uneven so you have to be careful when pushing the stroller off the train and on.





Going through the turnstiles was also a challenge. There was not always a door available to use. So we found it was easier to collapse the stroller, lift it over the turnstile, push your way through the turnstile, then through the half-door entrance you go. You have to be careful with the way you enter as once you feed your ticket through the entrance there is only one chance to enter. So if you turn the turnstile too much and are unsuccessful at entering with your bags, stroller, and child...then you won%26#39;t be able to re-enter unless there is a metro assistant at the window that can fix your ticket. You%26#39;ll need the ticket to exit at some stops.





All in all.....you%26#39;ll figure out your own routine and what works best for you. It%26#39;s definitely possible. We survived!

Traveling with Baby in Provence

Planning to rent an apartment in the Luberon with an 8 month old in September. I was wondering if any one could advise which towns in Provence were generally more stroller-friendly, and which were better for a baby carrier (e.g. bjorn)? Any other baby-friendly ideas would be appreciated. Thanks!




|||



Most of the villages in the Luberon are OK. Places like Gordes have narrow pavements and are on a steep slope but the locals manage! Certainly if you want to visit the Source at Fontaine de Vaucluse then you should use a baby carrier because you have to go up steps. Also to go to the top of Opede les Vieux.





ESCARGOT

props for airfare recommendations

I read in the forum last week that 1800flyeurope.com was among the flight booking sites favored by some forum readers. I had not heard of it before and checked it out. Found a fare to Paris in October, on United, that was about $70 less than was offered on any other site I could find. Thanks to whoever recommended it! Keep the recommendations coming!




|||



I heard about them from djkbooks, one of TA recent Paris Experts...



I bought around April for this Sept at $758 total per ticket, non-hub city. The other sites then were hovering around/over $900. This flight on Delta right now is $945 total per ticket.




|||



djkbooks also turned me on to 1800flyeurope.com. I%26#39;d also like to add that their customer service is really great.




|||



I%26#39;ve used 1800flyeurope to book every flight to Paris (and elsewhere) for the last 5 or 6 years. Their fares are always the best I can find. The airline websites have sales but I can NEVER get the sale fare. So I%26#39;ve stopped even looking at them. I just go to 1800flyeurope.

Where to have a picture perfect white Christmas?

G%26#39;day all,





I am arranging for 12 family and friends (all Australians, some children) to take off to Europe to experience a white Christmas!





Although we are all pretty excited and thrilled at the idea, we are at a loss as to where we should go.





We are dreaming of a picture perfect town, snow to play in, Christmas festivities and loads of Christmas spirit. Has anyone got some suggestions?





Many thanks in anticipation.





Nonny.






|||



Most of France is unlikely to see snow on the ground around Christmas. Snow will fall, but it will quickly melt unless the temperature stays at or below the freezing point. You%26#39;ll want to head for the mountains.





Annecy (about 50 km southwest of Geneva as the crow flies)comes to mind. It%26#39;s one of the most pleasant towns of its size (population 50,000)in France. There should be snow on the ground, but there%26#39;s no guarantee.





You%26#39;ll want to rent a house near there. I%26#39;ll have to leave it to others to suggest specific sources for rentals - or maybe different areas to stay in. Some places may be better tan others for organized festivities.





-- Steve




|||



To ensure snow on the ground at Christmas you will have to go to one of the high ski resorts.




|||



I%26#39;d suggest Switzerland, around Lauterbrunnen. There is snow on the high peaks all year round - Eiger, Monch, Jungfrau. We%26#39;ve even had snow during the night of a hot summer%26#39;s day! It wasn%26#39;t down in the valley, but lay in Wengen and Murren, not very high up.





Try posting the thread in the Swiss section.





Jo

Train or Plane, Returning to CDG for Flight Home

In early stages of planning a return trip to the Luberon area next spring. Currently trying to decide which option suits. Assuming current schedules (train and plane) remain in effect which would you do?





Option 1: Fly from Cincinnati to CDG, arrive at 10:10am and make connecting flight at 12:50pm and arriving at Marseille Marignane at 2:15pm. On return trip, flight leaves Marseille at 8am, arrives at CDG at 9:30am, with connecting flight departing for Cincinnati from CDG at 12:05pm.





On the plus side, we%26#39;ve flown out of Marseille before and can drop the car rental off using the drop box. Assuming we check any luggage we should only have to check it once and we%26#39;ll have 2.5hrs to make the connecting flight. Price (currently) is $991.00 per person (including *most* taxes.





Assuming that flights are on schedule, we%26#39;ll have plenty of time to get to whatever house we rent in the area. (We%26#39;re trying to stay on the south side of the Luberon for personal reasons...but may end up as far north as Menerbes). Early arrival at MRS would give us time to hit the Hyper U before they close. ;)





Option Two: Non Stop Air from Cincinnati to CDG, and purchase advance TGV tickets to either Avignon or Aix-en-Provence. (Toss up, depending on final location of villa). Cost $997.00 per person PLUS TGV tickets. Current 3 month advance Prem Tickets approximately 35 Euroes ea way, so total cost per person is $1095.00.





Advantages. Half as many take-offs and landings for my partner. I%26#39;ve been to Aix-en-Provence TGV to drop off passengers and can return rental car at drop box. There are currently scheduled TGVs from Aix and Avignon that arrive at CDG TGV Station at 9:18am. Is this enough time to get upstairs, get through security and get checked in for flight leaving at 12:05pm?





Disadvantages: We have to track our luggage between modes of transport. If we purchase train tickets in advance, and our arriving flight is late, we have to eat those tickets and purchase new for trip south. More importantly, if our return train is late to CDG we could be stuck for new return airfare. How calculated is that risk? Also, reasonable train from CDG (allowing at least 1.5 hour to make connection from arriving plane) would put us in AIX or Avignon closer to 5pm. Much less time to shop for supplies...but we wherever we rent, we won%26#39;t be able to check in until after 4pm at earliest.





We have plenty of time to make our decision. Just looking for feedback from fellow travelers. For what it%26#39;s worth, my partner hates to fly. I mean, really hates to fly.






|||



Here%26#39;s one vote for option 1.



Why? Ease of car return, familiarity with MRS,and no need to drag luggage around, lower cost ....




|||



In spite of the fact that I don%26#39;t like to fly around in-country in Europe, I also vote for option 1 - it seems to be the least stressful and most economical, at least at the moment.




|||



That%26#39;s what I thought. But tell that to my partner, aka Mr. Xanax. ;)





Any concern about the connection time between fligts at CDG? Currently, the return trip is scheduled to depart MRS at 8am and arrive at CDG at 9:30am with a 12:05pm departure.





For the record, our last trip was via Continental who codeshares with SCNF...so we flew Indianapolis to Newark, Newark to CDG and then made a connection %26quot;on Continental%26#39;s dime%26quot; to Gare St Charles, BUT we returned via 3 flights, originating out of MRS to CDG, CDG to Newark and back to Indianapolis.





Don%26#39;t remember the MRS flight being much late (or even what time it left. As I recall, any and all delays started in Newark, but there%26#39;s no guarantee. We made our connection to CDG with no problem.





Of course, if I%26#39;d realized we could have codeshared to Aix-En-Provence or Avignon, I would have looked at that option last time around. ;) Live and learn.




|||



fly in the day before -- you are n ot leaving enough time at CDG





you probably but not necessarily make your flight if everything goes perfectly -- but it is already tight -- so if the train is late or the plane is late, you blow a very expensive ticket -- and since this is not a throughbook situation, you have to buy the new one way ticket for thousands





my flight to Amsterdam from Chicago ended up arriving 6 hours late this June. A Thalys train trip a few years ago got into Paris 5 hours late.





It can happen -- this is all too tight





for high stakes connections either throughbook on the plane or come in the night before




|||



The flight in and out of CDG, unfortunately has to be in on Saturday (originating on Friday evening from the states of course). The departure also has to be the following Saturday.





Your point is a good one, of course and why I initially lean toward booking all the way through to MRS and back out of MRS with the connection at CDG.




|||



I suppose I could always tell Mr. Xanax that if we do option 2, and we miss our flight home he has to pay to get us back. ;)




|||



Have you considered booking airfare from CVG to XRF?





XRF is the Marseille train station using the TGV from CDG yet booking airfare to XRF gives you the same miss-connect protection as you would have with a flight to MRS.





It%26#39;s a hybrid solution which you might consider as option 3.




|||



On our last trip we booked through from Indy to Marseilles and got TGV service from CDG to XRF, but our return trip was air service out of MRS...but the downside to that is that it%26#39;s Continental and we have to make a connection in Newark before getting to CDG. If we go that route, I%26#39;ll book through to either Avignon or Aix, but we lose the advantage of non-stop service out of the states into Paris.





Will most likely bookthru to MRS, but will double check to make sure that we can%26#39;t get codeshare service with SCNF with Delta/NW.